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Awesome Vertical Garden With Recycled PET Bottles at Poor Family Home in Sao Paulo


Updated 08/04/11 11:51 AM · Posted by · 0 comments

Here's a post from one of my favorite sites, Treehugger! Brazilian design studio Rosenbaum collaborates with TV show Caldeirao do Huck in a segment called Lar doce lar (Home Sweet Home), which helps families in need re-designing their homes to improve their lives and self-esteem.

In its latest work for a family living in the outskirts of Sao Paulo, the firm included this neat vertical garden made from recycled PET bottles.

Although the idea is cool in itself, it's so much better knowing that it's part of a project to improve the lives of three women (mother and two daughters) that live in a one bedroom home with an income of 200 Reais (130 US dollars) a month.

Putting together an urban farm was not the designer's whim either: the women already had an eco-conscience and grew in small containers made from recovered food packaging.

The arrangement is of course thought for vegetables that don't take a lot of space to grow, like spices and medicinal herbs. Continue reading to learn about this vertical garden!

5 Space-Saving Cabinet Solutions For Tiny Apartments


Updated 07/21/11 9:50 PM · Posted by · 0 comments

Here's a post from one of my favorite sites, Treehugger!

In the tiny home, smart storage is a must. Hiding life's necessities behind sleek cabinetry often makes a space appear larger — and makes living organized and clutter free.

So cabinets and hanging closets are integra inl the design of Graham Hill's LifeEdited apartment renovation project in Manhattan.

Is it a surprise that a search for affordable cabinets with a sleek, minimalist approach and versatility in size leads us to none other than IKEA? We also have four other savvy solutions. Seen something better? Let us know in the comments.

1. Ikea Pax Shelving

There's a reason people turn to IKEA Pax cabinets — they are versatile, relatively inexpensive, and fairly easy to install. Oh yeah, and flatpack.

For Graham's LifeEdited space, shelving is everywhere in a variety of forms, but the ability to mix different sized units makes Pax a winner. Luckily, IKEA's green credentials are not too shabby. IKEA's MDF and particle board is made to German standards for off-gassing, VOCs are low, and there's no formaldehyde.

Pros: Price. Each double set of sliding Lyngdal doors costs $300. Shelving innards without shelves runs about $200.

Cons: Can be slightly rickety if not installed properly, doesn't have quite the sleekness of some Italian designs (see below).

Price: Around $900 for this unit with all of its shelves and extras.

2. Henrybuilt

These are custom-built cabinet and shelving units, and it shows. Henrybuilt aims to merge the European modular kitchen systems idea with custom cabinet-making skill. In materials such as oak and walnut, these cabinets are built to last.

Henrybuilt uses a "high percentage" of FSC-certified woods and sources bamboo and FSC-certified birch veneer for laminates.

Pros: The custom aspect would allow the LifeEdited space to be filled with an assortment of storage and cabinet units most suited to the floor plan.

Cons: Price, and perhaps timing. The company is also in Seattle, not close to the LifeEdited apartment.

Price: Custom by quote request.

Check out three more space-saving cabinet solutions for tiny apartments!

Related stories from Treehugger:

Michigan Woman Faces 93 Days in Jail For Planting a Vegetable Garden


Updated 08/02/11 5:38 AM · Posted by · 20 comments

I'm excited to present a post from one of my favorite sites, TreeHugger!

It just doesn't get more ridiculous than this.

Julie Bass of Oak Park, Michigan -- a mother of 6, law-abiding citizen, and gardener -- is facing 93 days in jail after being charged with a misdemeanor.

Her crime? Planting a vegetable garden in the front yard.

Bass says that she planted the garden after her front yard was torn up for some sewer repairs. Rather than wasting the opportunity to start with a clean slate by planting a lawn, she decided to really put the area to use, and plant a vegetable garden.

Her garden consists of 5 raised beds, where she grows a mix of squashes, corn, tomatoes, flowers, and other veggies. Bass received a warning from the city telling her to remove the vegetable garden, because it doesn't adhere to city ordinances (more on that later).  When she refused, she was ticketed and charged with a misdemeanor. Her trial, before a jury, is set to begin on July 26th. If she is found guilty, she can be sentenced to up to 93 days in jail.

Continue reading to find out more!

Tubohotel: Concrete Tubing Recycled Into Affordable, "All Tube" Hotel


Updated 07/07/11 4:00 AM · Posted by · 0 comments

I'm excited to present a post from one of my favorite sites, Treehugger! Here on TreeHugger we've already seen minimalist hotels made out of giant sections of concrete tubing. But who would have known concrete tubing could be actually made to look inviting, much less for travellers looking to stay in one of Mexico's more popular destinations? Located less than an hour away from Mexico City, Tepoztlan's Tubohotel is an affordable hotel that uses recycled concrete tubing for its rooms, a strategy employed by designers T3arc to build a hotel quickly and cheaply, without sacrificing the area's spectacular views.

According to ArchDaily, this hotel was inspired in part by architect Andreas Strauss' 2005 Das ParkHotel. However, Tubohotel's concrete modules add a touch of glass and comfort to allow guests a better panoramic view of the local mountain range, Sierra del Tepozteco. Legend has it that Tepoztlan is the birthplace of Quetzalcoatl, Mexico's ancient feathered serpent god.

Read and see more about this recycled concrete tubing hotel on Treehugger!

Here are a few more of my favorite posts from Treehugger lately:

Artists For Humanity Youth Develop Plastic Bag Bar Stools


Updated 06/22/11 8:54 AM · Posted by · 0 comments

I'm excited to present a post from one of my favorite sites, TreeHugger!

From Artists of Humanity comes an innovative design that turns more than 200 plastic shopping, dry-cleaning or newspaper bags into a colorful plastic bar stool, called "ReVision."

Made by inner-city youth in Boston, Massachusetts, the stools received the Social Responsibility Award by the American Society of Interior Designers (ASID) at the 2011 Architectural Digest Home Design Show in New York City.Besides fast foot chains, AFH is the largest youth employer in Boston, where they are based. They provide employment to more than two hundred inner-city teenagers per year, many of whom are under-served, in commission projects including painting, video, animation, sculpture, 3D design, graphic design and screen printing. The youth work with mentors and develop entrepreneurial skills. And they work out of a Platinum LEED-Certified building, called the Epicenter, which was designed in part by former participants of their programs.

Continue reading to see more!

Green Gift Guide For Father's Day


Updated 06/20/11 3:28 PM · Posted by · 0 comments

Eco-Friendly Father's Day Gifts

I'm excited to present a post from one of my favorite sites, TreeHugger!

Dads like to pretend they are easy to please: But when it comes to the perfect gift . . . well sometimes it's the no-fuss men that are the worst, tucking that gift away in a closet forever. This Father's Day, choose one of these green gifts: From classic glassware to modern iPad cases to chic messengers that double as baby bags, we have just the thing for every dad on your list.

Image: TreeHugger

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